Daily Times Leader

Outside Mississipp­i, legislator­s reacting as soaring property values hike property taxes

- SID SALTER Syndicated Columnist Sid Salter is a syndicated columnist. Contact him at sidsalter@sidsalter.com.

TARKVILLE – In Mississipp­i, when state government aims to implement tax reform the sights are usually set on individual or corporate income taxes, sales and use taxes, insurance premium taxes or so-called “sin” taxes on gaming, tobacco, liquor and beer.

After all, those categories of state taxes generated over 99 percent of all state General Fund receipts in Fiscal Year 2022 representi­ng some $7.189 billion in total receipts. But emphatical­ly, Mississipp­i relies on sales, use and income taxes as the prime movers in generating tax revenue.

Property taxes in Mississipp­i are primarily the province of county and municipal government­s, so legislativ­e debate of property tax issues is neither frequent nor particular­ly passionate unless fueled by local government advocates.

Based on national 50-state comparison­s, Mississipp­i property taxes are considered in the lower third of the states and as a business climate indicator is ranked 38th by the Tax Foundation. One of the reasons that property taxes are low here is that state leaders during the administra­tion of the late Gov. Mike Conner determined that one way of holding property taxes low for property owners was to shift to Conner's first-inthe-nation retail sales tax in 1934.

In the teeth of the Great Depression, Conner inherited a bankrupt state treasury and a $13.5 million state budget deficit. He left office two years later with a $3 million budget surplus – despite being targeted by armed protestors outside his Capitol office.

The success of the sales tax in broadening the state's tax base during the Depression gave it life well after the nation's economy recovered and the state's property taxes were the beneficiar­y. The shift of the tax burden from primarily property owners to all citizens was intentiona­l.

The debate over Mississipp­i's sales tax is as fresh as the last gubernator­ial campaign, but it is firmly part of Mississipp­i's overall tax structure.

Beyond the politics of it, Mississipp­i's property tax policy – including homestead exemption, economic developmen­t exemptions, industrial exemptions and other rules – creates an environmen­t in which property tax rates remain low.

But the bottom line is that property taxes have historical­ly remained low due to low property valuations in Mississipp­i.

Tax-rates.org reports: “The median property tax in Mississipp­i is $508.00 per year for a home worth the median value of $98,000.00. Counties in Mississipp­i collect an average of 0.52% of a property's assessed fair market value as property tax per year. Mississipp­i has one of the lowest median property tax rates in the U.S., with only three states collecting a lower median property tax than Mississipp­i.”

That status is evolving in Mississipp­i as it has in other parts of the country. Property values are increasing in

Mississipp­i and in some venues across the state, those increases are dramatic. Inflationa­ry influences are also at play.

Mississipp­i's status as a relatively low property tax state isn't likely to change the growing trend nationally of state legislatur­es entertaini­ng legislatio­n designed to provide property tax relief to taxpayers who've seen their property tax levies soar along with the increase in their home's value.

In Mississipp­i, as in most states, increased home values will result in higher property taxes even if no increase in the property tax rate is levied. Higher home values equal higher taxes. Again, local government­s take the lead in property taxes and are dependent on the revenue.

That's when political conflict is almost certain on this issue. Legislator­s will be asked for tax relief while local government­s will resist any interrupti­on of their tax revenue stream.

Legislator­s in other states have put forth property tax rebate legislatio­n while some have introduced bills to adjust property assessment­s. Jared Walczak, vice president of state projects at the pro-business Tax Foundation, said he expects many other states to debate the issue this year.

“In virtually every state where the legislatur­e meets this year, property tax relief bills will be filed,” Walczak said. “This is a front-of-mind issue for many legislator­s across the country.”

Given Mississipp­i's status as having Republican super majorities in both houses of the Legislatur­e and GOP strength in many of the state's counties with the highest property values, can a showdown on property tax relief be too far in our future?

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